Friday, November 6, 2009

Before planting our vegetable garden, chicory to us was a coffee ingredient in New Orleans. Little did we know that we've been eating chicory in its various forms for years. Dandelion greens, radicchio, endive and escarole are members of the chicory family. They vary in color, texture, and growth habit, but all chicories possess a wonderful bitterness and bite. The chicory used to flavor coffee is actually the root of an endive plant, roasted and ground.

Chicories grow best in cool weather. Too much heat turns them unpleasantly bitter so in Houston we grow chicories in the autumn and spring. Chicories are high in folate, vitamins A and K, and fiber. Italian cooking embraces chicory in its many forms, and we chose several varieties offered by Seeds from Italy. This website has an impressive selection, and the seeds arrive in big, glossy, colorful packets with multilingual descriptions and cute pictographs demonstrating planting instructions. We're growing Catalogna Punterelle, Barba di Cappuccino, and Radicchio di Castelfranco to name just a few.

David wanted to add chicory to a foccacia featuring traditional Italian ingredients: potatoes, pine nuts, gorgonzola dulce and rosemary. Lots of strong flavors, so the question was which chicory would work the best. We narrowed it down to Puntarelle or Barba di Cappuccino because they have matured the fastest in the garden. The Puntarelle is long and narrow, mostly stem and very little leaf. The Barba di Cappuccino has big serrated leaves with a thicker center stem. We conducted a quick taste test and decided that the Puntarelle had just the right amount of bite for our foccacia. We plucked rosemary from the garden, and its fragrance was almost overwhelming. With the puntarelle, gorgonzola, and rosemary, this foccacia is definitely not for the timid. As Nonna would say, devi accettare l'amaro insieme al dolce (you have to learn to take the bitter with the sweet).

Cook potatoes in gently boiling, salted water partially covered until they start to get soft, 10-15 minutes. Drain immediately and run under cold water to stop the cooking process. When cool enough to handle, cut into 1/4" thick slices.

Blanch puntarelle in boiling water for 2 minutes, drain and run under cold water. Roughly chop or keep whole if small.

Heat oven to 325 and bake pine nuts on a sheet pan until they start to darken and become fragrant, 4 to 5 minutes. Remove from oven to cool.

Assemble foccacia. First brush crust with the olive oil. Then spread around half the cheese. Then add potatoes, then puntarelle, rosemary, and rest of cheese. Sprinkle salt and pepper on top to taste. Do NOT add the pine nuts at this stage.

Bake at 450 on a pizza stone (if you have one) until crust is golden brown, 12 to 14 minutes. We have two ovens, so we preheat this oven for one hour before using so the stone gets hot.

Remove from oven, sprinkle pine nuts on top.

Foccacia with Puntarelle, Gorgonzola Dulce, Rosemary & Pine Nuts made the Foodbuzz Top 9 today! The Foodbuzz Top 9 is a photo-driven collection of top-buzzed posts within the Foodbuzz community. Congratulations again, and thanks for being a part of Foodbuzz! Cheers, The Foodbuzz Editorial Team